Clinical Somatosensory Evoked Potential

임상 체성감각 유발전위 검사

  • Ryoo, Jae-Kwan (Dept. of Rehabilitation Medicine, Maryknoll Hospital) ;
  • Kim, Jong-Soon (Dept. of Rehabilitation Medicine, Maryknoll Hospital)
  • 류재관 (메리놀병원 재활의학과) ;
  • 김종순 (메리놀병원 재활의학과)
  • Published : 1996.03.31

Abstract

Evoked potentials(EP) are defined as electric responses of the nerves system to sensory stimulation. EPs are used mainly to test conduction in the visual, auditory, and somatosensory systems, especially in the central parts of these systems. Somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP) are the potentials elicited by stimulation of peripheral nerves and recorded at various sites along the sensory pathway. SEPs types consist mainly of SEPs to electric stimulation of arm or leg nerves. SEPs to arm stimulation are usually recorded simultaneously from clavicular, cervical, and scalp electrodes; SEPs to leg stimulation are recorded from lumbar, low thoracic, and scalp electrodes. Subject variables that have practical impotance are age, limb length, body height, and temperature. General clinical interpretation of abnormal SEPs wave decreases of peripheral conduction time, and abolition of SEPs recorded from different levels to identify lesions of peripheral nerves, plexus, nerve root, spinal cord, cauda equina, hemispheric brainstem, and cerebral parts of the somatosensory pathway.

Keywords